Gleaner_19591120

k''
n"
nd
ur
in
es.
Good Luck
Practice
Teachers
g. I'L - - - --- ---'
_.#mf CC5((E'"G~
LIBR~. r v
Remember!
Don't Miss
J. B.
...
uo
ay Vol. XXXV-No. 3
tr·
NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCHESTER, N.Y. Friday, November 20, 1959
:~ NFCCS Hc»lds Weekend Congress;
he
he Presents Student Hour Program
•ol
The N. F. C. C. S. Congress
·e- was opened with a welcome to the
m delegates, in the Nazareth Col­Is.
lege Auditorium, on November 7,
st 1959, by the Chairman, Marcin
Reed. The theme of the Con­i~
l gress was "Justice In Buman Re­nt:
lations."
n- ~r. Allen Lowenstein, a grad­it
· UAle of the University of South
h> Carolina and Yale Law School, n
x, past president Qf the National
>Y Student Association in 1950, and
d, a former United Nations Olr
n~ serl'cr on Student Conditions in
k, the Nea1.· East and Africa who
he currently holds a position with
se the' Federal government, spoke on
ld 11(ntel'nationa1 Justice."
k- On Sunday afternoon, Novem­,;,
ber 8, 1959, Mr. James Conneen
d, add1-essed the Cong•·ess with the
er topic: "Human Relations." M'l·.
Conncen is the first national Vice­President
of tho Social Action
Affairs of N.F.C.C.S. and a stu­oknt
at St. Petru·'s College, Eliza·
>(•
th
C·
!s
ts
ly
4,
ld
~-
;h
,•.·
IS
l'.
l·
'"
beth, New Jersey.
At 2:45 J>.m. the Congress •·e-convcned
in the Nazareth College
Auditorium for the N.F.C.c.s.
Pt·aetical ApJ>iieations session.
James Conn~en spoke on having
a united front of Catholic Col­ltge
and University Students.
Mr. Fred Attea, head of the
National Commission on Indust..
rial Relations, N.F.C.C.S., de­livered
a speech on the commis­sion
system, its \UI.CS and abuses.
Annual Prog ram
On Thu1·sdny, November nine­teenth,
the N.F.C.C.S., or Nat­ional
Fedet·ation of Catholic Col­lege
students, presented its an­nual
program for our Student
Hour. Miss Joan Arns, a student
(rom Rosary Hill College in Buf­ralo,
spoke to the faculty and st u·
dent body. She is now president
of the Lake Erie Region of N.F.
C.C.S. which includes Nazareth,
Canisius, D'Youville, Gannon,
Mercyhuxst, Niagara, Rosary
Rill, and Villa Maria. She form·
el'ly served as class president in
her freshman year, the region's
secretary-treaS\1rcr in her sopho­more
year, and first vice-presi­dent
in he>· junior year.
Miss Arns has also attended
National Congresses in New
York City, San Ft·anciseo, and
St. Louis.
Speech Assembly
Elects New Officers
For Coming Year
The newly elected officers of
Speech Assembly a>'C Kathy La·
Delta, president, and Nancy Koch ,
seeretary . treasurer. Associate
faculty members are Sister Helen
Daniel, moderato!': Mrs. Naomi
Chamberlain, speech therapist;
and Miss Mm·y Ann Steckbeck, of
the Drama Department.
Speech Assembly will meet nt
fow· o'clock on the first and third
Wednesdays of every month in
Room 129. A coffee hour will fol­low
each meeting, during which n
question and answer period will
be conducted. All students arc in­vited
to attend these meetings.
This year, Speech Assembly
will supplement the speech cor­re<:
tion course through lectures
given by doct~rs, dentists, ortho·
dontists, and speech thempist. It
will a lso present speakers who
will lecture on topics of interest
to those in nursing and sociology,
and to those intet'ested in thea­trical
work.
A partial list of speakers for
the yea•· includes Dr. Gladys
Jann, Speech Consultant for the
Monroe County Board of Educa·
t iona! Service; 1o1r. David Chari·
Red Cross Entertainment Provides
Relaxation for Hospitalized Veterans
:7
1·
:o
'l
,·o,,
:3
19
I ')
.J
1-1
The Canandaigua Vete.rans'
)!ental Hospital offers a weekend
service progt·am supported by the
Red Cross College Activities Ser­vice.
The hospitsl feels that you
can only •·eecive the full value of
this program by spending t hree
weekends at the hospital.
The year is divided into tr i·
mesters a·nd you select one week­end
from each trime.stel'. No more:
than fifteen otudents go on any
one weekend and the first time
you go there will be one or two
members of the group who have
some ~xperience at the hospital.
Your weekend is spent talking to
patients, playing cal'ds, etc .. with
them. The>·e is no fee for this pro-gmm.
Your meals and living
quarters a1·e provided for you.
What's the purpose of this pro­g
ram? First of all, it is to help
the patients. Raving someone
come and tolk to them is one of
t he best ways to get mental pat­ients
out of the withdrawal which
is one of the symptoms of men­tal
illness. Secondly, the pt·ogram
helps us get over our false ideas
and subconscious fears of mental
illness.
Some of the girls from Naz­areth
have a lready participated
a nd have found it very rewarding.
Many others have signed up. If
you are interested contact Mary
Joan Costigan, Senior.
(!)h, .Prwi that ieH&
me /4e .Puu£ me a
h.ea/d~wdh
~l"eu
ton, lighting technician !or Catho·
lic Theater and Music Theater;
Dr. Daniel Subtelny; Or. Joanne
Subtelny; and Mr. Robert Smett.
Noted Catholic Lecturer
Addresses Student Body
Sixth i n the series of distin­guished
lecturers invited to Na,a­reth
Coliege this year is the noted
English Catholic lecturer, trans­later,
a nd columnist, Miss Cecily
Hastings. Miss Hastings a d­dressed
the student body on Nov­ember
19.
Developing her topic "Religion
under the Open Sky," Miss Hast­ings
n~counted her own expe1'­iences
as a :speake1· lor the Eng­lish
Catholic Evidence Guild.
Guild members explain Catholic
dogma and practice to street-cor­ner
crowds. Miss Hastings drew
upon her own decade of service to
describe the religious needs and
difficulties of the average man.
She also pointed out how startling
but bow profitable are the unex­pected
realizations of gaps in the
s peaker's own understanding of
the faith.
Miss Hastings is the second
British lecturer to address the
faculty a nd students this year .
Douglas Hyde, who visited the
College in October, is also a
na tive of England.
Mission Day profits total
approximately $3,500. Con­gratulations
to M1·s. Raillon!
Concert, Dance Planned
For St. Bonaventure Day
On December 5, 1959, Naz­at
·eth girls will gt·eet the men of
St. Bonaventure for the scheduJed
St. Bonaventure's Day. This Day
will be held at Naza>·eth ·College
and is planned along lines similar
to the Octobet· Festival.
A senior, Mary Anne Linck,
presides o v c r t h e committee
planning the Day. Members of
the committee include: Emanu­ella
Canzoneri, Entertainment
Chairman; Linda Casey, Hostess
Chairman; Joan Stankus, Pub-
1 icity Chairman; Kathy La­Delpha,
Mistress of Ceremonies
for Entertainment; P a t r i c i a
Lonergan, Decorations Ghaitmnn;
and Connie Dodge, Chairman of
Buffet Suppel'.
European-Bound Students
Given Pertinent Information
The opportunity to visit Eu­rope
in 1960 continues to attract
the Nazareth student body. Since
the first. announcement was mnde
by Dr. Otto in Septembc>·, many
students have become curio us as
to whe1·e they will go and what
they can expect to see. To aoswe>·
some of their questions two stu ..
dent hour programs arc being
devoted to the iss ue.
On November 12, Mr. Grennel
of Trans-Worid-Airlincs present­ed
films on Spain, France, and
Jtaly. Following the films he dis­cussed
other aspects of the trip.
On December 3 Mr. Grennel
will again present a film, entitled
uAir Advcntm·e to Eut·ope," a1te.r
which a discussion pet·iod will be
held. It is hoped thai the ques­t
ions of prospective tom·ists will
prove to be a means of deepening
their appreciation of what lie.•
ahead for them. •ro those lucky
students who will become inter­national
travelers this spring­Bon
voyage!
Sociology Majors
Attend Conference
During the week of Novembet·
l 5. senior sociology majors at­tended
the New York State Wel­fare
Co•tfe>·ence in Syracuse. At
a student meeting on Tucsday,
November 17, they observed a
panel discussion in which Miss
Virginia Jones, an alumna of
Nazareth College, participated.
Sister Paulette, chairman of the
Sociology Department, presided at
a meeting at which Dr. White
from Washington D.C., rept·cscnt­ing
the Council on Social Work
Education, was the pl'incipal
speaker.
Plans for this Day include: a
buffet supper at 5 :30 P.M.; a
joint concert of the Nazareth and
St. Bonaventure Glee Clubs at
7:00 P.:M., and climaxed by infor­mal
dance from 9-12.
St. Bonaventure Day welcomes
all co1ners. Come one! come aU!
University Founder
Headlines Assembly
Dr. 'l'homas P. Melady, an au­thority
on current development in
Africa, will speak a t Student
Rout• on Dec·>mber 10. llis topic
will bo "Great Living Men of
Af1·ica."
The Jnstituie of African
Studies at Duquesne University
was founded hy D•·· Melady. At
present, he is organizing "The
African Fai>·" which is scheduled
to visit A mc.ric:a cities during
1960. The fait· will present prog­rams
on culture, trade oppOr·
tunitics, and study in Afriea. D1·.
Melady has been Foreign Trade
Advisor for Africa i11 the Depart­ment
of State, and he has taught
in Ethiopia at the Ethiopian Uni­versity
College. Tn the spring of
1960, his book Pro/ile8 of African
Lea<le1·8 will be ready for pub­lication.
College Provides Service
For Benefit of Students
Sister Eva Marie has begun
her annual job placement inter­viewing
with the senior class. Sis­ter
began with J>rospective tea­chers
and social workers, but
plans to complete senior inter­views
before the Ch>·istmas holi­days.
The placement service offered
by Nazareth College gives its stu­dent-
s and alumnae the oppor­tunity
to secure positions suited
tu their abilities and tastes with­out
the inconvenience and ex­pense
involved in negotiating with
outside placement agencies. 'l'he
College offers this servic~ free
of charge, while professional
agencies charge as much as live
percent of the initial salat·y.
For several years the record
for placement of Nazareth sen­iors
has been one hundred per·
cent. The placement director a lso
secures part;..time and summer
employment for students who ap­ply
to her.
During the school year seniol'
sociology majors spend Tuesday
morning visiting institutions and
agencies in and around Rochester.
Thank Thee for Education
\\'hen Thanksgiving dawns probably the thing most of us are thank·
ful for is the fact that it is a holiday.
However, what else do we feel thankful fo1· on Thnnksgiving? We
arc thankful for parents, friends, life, liberty and ou•· material pos­sessions.
But how many of us say "thank you" for the thi ngs we have
that we don't like?
When an extra heavy assignment or term paper ia assigned O\'Cr
the holiday, bow many o! us are thankful !or it? :-:ot very many. Most
of us apend most of our time griping over the mju•tice of it all and
then the lust minute stay up all night to do it-a martyr to the cause
of education. We nil do it; it is htlllll\11 nature to put off distasteful
things until the last minute.
However, the phase of it that needs examining is our attitude. Every
o.s:ugnment has a purpose even though we may not rcnlir.c it at the time.
Everything we do now helps shape our character. If we wilt under an
cxt1·n us~ignment now, what. will we don few yctu·s lt·om now· when n
gt·enl.<'t· J•csponsibility comes om· wny? It isn't easy to grow up. \Ve nre
finding lhat accepting things with mntul'ity is not as much fun as
gl'iping over them.
I an1 not delivering a sermon on idealism but merely pointin~r out
thnt we are no longer children, and we wouldn't be here unless ''i"e hnd
n desire for education. Therefore, let'• make an honest etrort to necept
lhe ditliculties with th~ fun.
This Thanksgiving let's give a bit of thanks for the fuel that we are
enjoying .a lour-year p•·oving ground btfore we at·c completc.ly on OU1"
own. Uut for an accident o! birth we might be p?lishing up the iron
curtain instead.
Consider Others In Class Change
This year Nnza•-eth College has 667 full-time students on the cam·
pus, 1t record number in the history of the college. This surely indi­cate•
that our college has gained the admi1ation and •·esp""t of peot>le
fnt· nnd wide. But with the increase in student. numbers, n situation
which ha~ been gJ'uduully developin~ 18 this year uggruvnted into u
majo•· problem. In 1950, when we hud 415 students, even in 1954, when
there wea·e 137 on campus, the five-minute interval b.,•twcen classess was
adequate, :-\ow w1th over GOO students su•·ging a1·ound at the end or
every 60 minute period, many of them desperately tryinlt' to · make it'
C•·om u hb1·ary classroom to one on the second or thi1·d Ooor or th,·
admiui~ttrntion building, it seem~ thnt. five minutes it! not long enougH.
Pn1·t. of Lite diflieu lt.y, however, seems to grow oul o·r the thoughtless­nc:
ts of students who urc not themselves en route to another class nt.
th~ momC'nL Such students are ofwn seen blocking 1>agsa.geways o1·
lo•tering on the stair• or landings to chat with someone going in the
op,,osite direction, while a crowd o! other students is forced to scram·
blc discourteously around them. There appear to be two 1>ossible solu­tions
to the tn·oblem o! "unavoidable delay" in change of classes:
cith~e· n t.cu-minuLe int.CI'vul between classes, which would necessilnlc
running tbe customa•·y 8 "hour" doy until 5 o'clock instead of 4, or
(equally undesirable) intitating a program of Saturday classes. Bt'­fore
such drastic measures become reality. why not experiment. with
what a litUe "enlightened self-interest" could accomplish? Let's think
beCo1·e we walk. Let's nsk ourselves, ''Which is the most di1·ect way to
!llY nex_t. class?" H possible, usc stnia·wnyli in the front pnl't or the
administration bui lding to relieve the congestion on the reaJ· sta i1·!J hy
the cloister walk. Uemember, the Saturdsy you S8\'c may b<! your own!
THE GLEA 'Jo:R
S'I'UDENT P UUL!CATION OF
NAZAI!E'I'Il COLLEGE, liOCJJESTEil, N. Y.
Friday. No,·ember 20. 1959
Editor-in-Chief .................................... Camille Morris
Associnte Jojditors ......... . ..... Diane Chri!itian, Rosemat·y Salerno
News Ed ito•· ... .. ................. . ..... .. ..... . Dot•othy T•·ybu lski
Assistant. News Editor .............. . ...... . ...... . Ann<! Duysscn
Feature t:ditor .................................... Dorothy Cullen
Assistnnt Feature Editor ... . . . .... , . . . . . . .. . ......... Pat O'Harn
Exchange Edito•· .............................. ftosemury Courtney
Hct>orters .. Rosemary Christiano, Cathcl'ine Gormley, Lot·elln Scinta,
Virginin Burgholzer, Pntricia Trlonfct·a, Sally O'Toole, Dorine
llonan, Kay B.•rrelt, Grace Corcoran, Ann Gilbert, Eileen MeGee,
Ruth Uowan, Joanne Wolfe, Barbara Kraus, Patricia Powderly,
Anne Glngowski, Kathy Sheehan, Chl'istine WickN'l, Jean Brodeur,
Eleanor Kawkn, Patricia Brogan, Diane Sciscioli, Sheila Kelly,
Mn1·y Kay MacNamara, Marilyn Cnhie•·, Mary Ann Lanahan,
Lnu1·e! :llille•·, J>utriciu Denniston, Judy Todd, Jody Ryan. Eliza­beth
Tyne, Kathy O'Brien, Ma•·y Dolan, Joanne Sca•·lotta.
Business Manager ........................... . ...... Patricia Walsh
Proo!readcrs. -. - ............... Susan McGinnis, Mory Kay Killackey
l llustJ·nto•· . .... .. . •....... ...... ... . ... . .......... Dolores Cicconi
Typists ....... ·~ ...................... Murcia Davis, Francine Hart
Advisor .................................... Sister Thomas Marion
THE GLEANER
CHAPLAIN'S CORNER
The )J n s •
begins wi~h
those remark·
able words of
deliberate
choice w h i c b
arc at once on
expression or
human dignit)•
and a stat.C!·
ment of the
Futhcr Shannon freedom oC the
child ron of
God: •·r will go unto the altar of
God.'' We do not say: "I have to
go to the altar of God" or "I
ought to go," but "I want to go."
We could choo8e otherwise. We
could say: ·• I will go unto I h e
bt·cakfast table to start my day,"
or Hf will go unto a classroom to
stnrt my day." Every time we go
to M a s s, w ~ a r e deliberately
choosing to stu•·t our day at Cod's
Llltar.
l tiilY this is an expt·cs.sion of
human dignity; it's good psychol­ogy
too. The firot step toward be­coming
a saint. is to want to be­come
a saint.: thu ti.-st step townrd
becoming u I(OOd student iK to
want to bccoen • u good student..
So lbe fit·st step toward making
the )tass important in my life is
to want to make it impo1·tant in
my life.
0! com·~e. we cannot really MY
those wo1·ds : " I will go unto the
altar of God'' in church or chnt>el
in the morning, unless we hnve
already said these words of deli·
berate choic.o at least twice before.
FiJ"St, we must suy them the night
before. When we set. our nln1'm,
we huve t.c> make a delibenlte de·
cision : "I will go unto the alta a·
of God tomorrow morning:' Then,
when the ulann goes off (that
c•·ucial monwnt each day when
chornct.e•·s nrc mnde or broken)
we must sny once again: '"I wi ll
go unto lhe aita1· of G o d t hi a
IUOl'ning."
But it i.s noL enough to answet·
the quesdon: "Will I go to the
nlta t· of God?'' Supposing the an­bWel
· is: " I will," l must still nn·
wwer anoth ca· question: "' llow
shall l go lo the altar of God?'
The answer d~numds an aware·
ness tha~ the )lass is primaril)•
not a prayer but an ac:tion, nnd
the action o! the Mass is the ac­tion
of gift-giving. l must go to
the altar of God, not empty-han­ded,
but with gir~. The only ~tift
I can give that is really impor­tant
is myse, r. How much of my­self
will I give? As much as I can
today. Plense God, the next time
il will be niOI'c. I wi ll give my duy
- with its clusscs and ossign­ntents,
its fJ'irndships and con­Oicts.
its joys and sorrows. I will
1·11~ them on the paten. I will pou1·
them into lhe chnlice. 1 will ask
Ch•·ist to trnnsfo•·m them into a
gi ft worthy of Cod. The M a so
will become not only Chl'ist'•
gift or the Church ·s, but m i n e
also.
A Catholic is ns lt'ood o 1 a •
mediocre as his Mass. Jlow much
docs the Mass mtun to me? llow
m u c h \Y i 11 it mean to me? A
g1eat deal depends on how and
how often I say those words or de­liberate
choke: "I will go unto
lhe altar or God."
Quip heard in Washington, D.C.:
'"II you're n()t confused, you'r<'
not well informed."
Friday, November 20, 19
Christian Challenge Is Being Met
That th<' baLLie !or the minds and souls of men is being waged
never before in this world was til<! point emphasi~ed by Douglas a,
in his inspi1·ing talk at the October 22nd student hour in Nazart
College nuditorium. A little rellection stimulates many questions abo
the dedlc•;ted, fanatical cll'oets of the Communists compared with d
apparent indiiTe•·cnce of Christians who should also be engaged in tl
struggle.
Firat of all, the premises of each aide are basically ditrerent. 1l
Communistic philosophy i• rooted in the idea that the state is supns
and thr individual comt>letely subordinated to thi• authority. Cn~
tian ity, on t he other hand, recognizes tho s upreme dignity o! ~
individunl and the God-given rights which b<!long to him as a m'!
BeCorc p1-onouncing a hasty condemnation of indifferent ChrisLill
let us look at some important factors. First of all, Communism dj
have many zealous adh~rents. But in the mnin they arc victim~
thought-control. They know only what the Party permits th~m to k
Secondly, the Communists employ threat~ nnd force; they cnn liqui
those who du•·c to Ol>pose them. Thirdly, Communists arc indoctrin&
from early youth with the idea of the sup1·emacy of their ccon
system. They are led to believe that the future is inevitably
because the forces of history so determine it.
Though Communists and Christians aim at the same objecti
wodd conqucst-Christian3 cannot countenance such brutal and u
telligcnt means to that end, however effective they may be at
moment. And in (act, if one looks closely at the contemporary
one discovers that many Christians are doing a good job of living
own dediution. Any number of Christians have taken positiom
chosen CIII'CN'S which are di•taste!ul to themselves personally
o! the OPIIOI'tunity such t>osilions afford for inHuencing othcn.
Such conduct is la•·gely inspired by a movement. begun in 1045,
Christopher movement. Its purpose is to cu•·ry the truth, justice,
decency of Christian principles out of homes and churches into
contemporary scene in n concerted effort to change the world for
better. Today thousands n•·e doing just that.
Much mot·e "doing" is 11 desperate need. But let us not undc•·esti
the dedienled men and women who a1·e J•ight now "'doing," who
ualously encouraging and inHuencing others, who arc pc•·meuting
phases of n1odcrn life with the truth and love of Christ, who are
ing to sanctify the whole world, the whole or life, and the whole
by applyinlt' the message of the Gospel.
"It is bette•· to light one cundle than to ctu·sc the da•·kness."
we cannot. alford to he snt.isfied too easily in times "when atToirs
souJ.size." \Vc must a1el't.. out·se.Jves to means and ends.
The main hall hummed with
the voices of hundreds of milling
students from Ireland and abroad,
returned from their summer holi­day
to begin or resume their
studies uL U.C.D. Gradually, hav­ing
learned !J-om the porte•· the
1oom number~ for vurious lee­lUI'~
(thel'!• being no posted
•~hedule, as at home), succ~ssive
g•·oups or students departed, leav­ing
th<• hnllwny once mo•·e t>nSS·
a hie.
To look nt the three sto•·y g1·nn·
ite building on Ea•·lsfoJ·t Tel'l'ace.
I did not guess that it was the
gtneral headquarters for about
G,COO students, although it i~ n
large edifice. Not all leetm·es for
the various Cncu lties - liberal
arts. science. law, medicin<', agri­culture,
ond engineerinK- a r e
given thel'<'. however, as some ol
the new subm·ban campu~ is nl­•
·eady in use.
When fil'sl udviscd aguinst the
load f Dm C8rl'ying, J wonde1•ed
how regular •tudents could earn
their B.A. in three years when
the)• conside•·ed my 16 hours (his­toa
·y. eeonomics, ethics, politics,
nnd psycholof{y) an overload. Now
that I am settled in the Univer·
sity •·outinc, I understand better.
First year students take four
C<>urses, often divided into two
''Passe~'" nnd two '; llonours.,
courses. This distinction seems to
be essential ly one of dc1>th of
study and nmount and quolily of
work expected. For s~nd and
third years, students take one or
(more often) two course•;
they eomc to know lho•·oughly
one fails the second year
is possible to proceed to t h
yen r, as the degree exam (
I think comparable to our
prehensive) at the end ol
year cove•·• both years' work.
is the all-important B.A. exu
considerable amount or oo·
reading is expected in conn
\\.'ith each com·sc; in historr
have several separnle book
!ot• the different lcctu•·e scrl
the course. In fact, my book
begin to resemble a library'•
catalogue! Outside work 11
confined to reading; I
twelve letm papcJ•s due ia
cour:JC of this year.
Despite a busy ucademi<
the students I have met hart
for run as well. There is a
i ng of some club every nig •
well ns un unbelievable num
mixers sponso1·ed by the diff
facu lties. These f riendly mea
women may be seen chatt1
the lounge, dancing at
dances, called ceilidhes (ka
or s trolling beneath the
holly, and evergreen in the
ful lvcugh Gardens which
the main building with St
House, the student center
old adage about all work
play is g i v e n a pratical
cation, 1\nd the vitality is i
ious. The more I see or lrl
the more I love it!
-Deirde llcl\i.
•59 friday, November 20, 1959
Church in the Suburbs
by Cntherinc Gormley
u Tne Church and the Suburbs
It • by Andrew M. Gr~eley
This book i s a re1ume o I a
lfltSI's impressions of the s ub­rblln
migration. It points out
oly U~me of the mnin suburban
roblems and their implications
!or the Catholic Chui"Ch.
Father Gt'Cfley's purpose is to
"'" the diseussion. lie docs not
r<tn pretend to know the nns­nrs.
He says that "suburbia is a
olact and a way of life." He de­~
rib,. the backgt·ound of ut·ban
r 11p:m!ion. examines subut·bia as
a physical phenomenon, and out­IllS
the problems besetting the
""•ban psyche.
lilt
ni
Father Greeley goes on to dis­
·" the Catholic suburbanite.
~uburbia bJ•mgs on a renewed
"'ilding progmm for the church
and also causes a tm·ning point
the hiotory of the American
·•rc:b. As late as 1946, 66'1< of
• Catholic Ameriean population
rt working rlass and immi­rrant...
Since World Wnr II, the
. I. bill has brought into cil·cula­••
n ntnny more Catholic colleg~
ptduales, who al'e moving into
pt·ofessions and in turn mov­e
lfttO the suburbs.
There is a changed atmosphere
!•~n elergy and laity because
' increased Catholic education
~~ng the laity. The suburban
rit~t finds that he must be a
,.ell, babysittel', ehapcr·onc, soli­ot.
or, banker etc. in addition to
foremost duties as ap~ritual
4imtor of his ftock.
Tbi3 book goes on to such top­u:
"The Suburban Husband
\'n.nishing An1cricnn :'• 11Thc
'~burban Wife-Who N c e d s
'ty!''
Tlti.! is a book valunble to any
ng woman who is at all inter·
..W in her future.
CUT
TRAVEL
COSTS
Sheraton Hotels
STUDENT-F ACU LTV
DISCOUNTS
Htrt't money-s.ovlng news.
lor Sludeots, faculty ond all
other mUege penonnel. Dur­inz
"-eekends and college
ncations, Sheroton offers
)'OU special low rates - even
lower rates when two or more
O«UPY the same room.
Special group rates nro pro­vided
Cor athletle tealt\3,
d•bo. other college Ofi8n·
iz:ations..
You pt these diseounta at
aoy of Sheraton'• 1>4 hotels
io the U.S.A., Hawaii and
C.nada. Jus~ prcsen~ your
Shmt.on J.D. card when you
rte~st<r. To get a Sheraton
1.0. card, oont.:lct:
PATRICIA POWDERLY
168 FAIRHAVEN ROAD
Roc:hes!er I 0, New York
Pulse Beat
by
Pot
Trionreru
Never lo deviate from a pr ...
scribed format, tha~ is, the one
set up by oneself, is Sllllposcdly
not n good policy, so with tongue
in check, l shall-deviate, that is.
Joy manifests itself at various
and varied locales, in the show~s.
the ml lib at the end of class, and
more exclusively at the nightly
dinner hout·, when the mental ac­tivity
ot the day is at high pitch,
and when the good feeling of un­other
· day gone on tha~ ever eter­nal
r oa d to the weekend is
a chieved.
What goes on :1t the dinner ta­blo?
This month n sample.
Strictly Colleginte Beat
0 d you know that the phi!C)­sophy
dcpurtmcnt is conducting
a survey on necessa1·y beings?
What is a necessary being? Any­thing
that is necessary of counse.
Well just what is necessary! We
might list a few of the more
striking examples of this cate­gory.
Nccessnt·y beings cons is t of ut
least ten more flights of stail·s in
the back hall, a bigger parking
lot-with ears. sharp knives for
"cutters" (but I go to all my
rlasses), men instead of boys, and
a good sense of humor.
If these are necessn•·y, wh!ll
could be unnecessary? Silly
questions deserve . .. , well ...
An unnecessary being could be
described as anything that we
could not use even if we wanted
to.
Now what could be I is ted in
I ! JUST TAKE ME TO
PITTSFORD INN
Pittsford, New York
BILL LISI, Prop.
Bastian Division
JOSTEN COMPANY
Officio/
Jewelers ond Engravers
ROBERT E. KILLIP
I 05 Laney Road
Rochester 20, N. Y.
Hillside 5-1706
THE GLEANER 3
Sodality Meeting
Cites Censorship
Modern College Students Secure Jobs,
Gain Experience for Choice of Work Many a kick bas been leveled at
that much-overworked term *'cen­sorship."
In an effort to appre­ciate
its need and/or abuses, the
Sodalfty is focusing its monthly
genera! meeting discussions on
this pr·oblcm. The Sodalists and
Associate Sodalists hope to gain
a balantoed understanding of this
force in our society.
Opening ideas were presented
at the October meeting by Grace
Corcoran, who examined the
natur·e of censorship and the in­formnti
vc t·olc of the Legion of
Decency. Hc1· comments were <'ll·
thusiastieally reworked and ap­plied
in group confereneea and
exchanges.
Further plans include discus­sions
or censorship in all media
of communication and social life,
with a spceiul view to current
altitudes and pro and con ccnso•·­ship
organization.
this tantalizing column?
The quoted examples were: the
Mission Room for anything but
s m o k i n g 1 what machines?),
alat·m clocks, if you happen to
have a large, shocking bdl just
outside your door, wa,ste paper
baskets since they're only inter­mediaries
to the i_ncinerator any.
way, a sidewalk to the librory
(what gras•fl, nod grass seed.
Un!ortunntcy, since t his semi­nar
of JlUl'C intelligentsia is oft
pondered between the pork chat>
and beans, it often gets cover-ed
over by butter and is laid to T<'al
on a slice of bread. Only after
dessert is the true conclusion to
our discussion achieved.
Therc!ore, •tond by for this as­tute
statement: What could and
should be necc•sary? Anything
which is of itself not unnecessary
- undoubtedly. This is necessar­ily
true of itself and, as the table
philosopher would say, must exist,
for, after all, if it did not, how
could it be diocussed in the firs~
place? And that is really reul if
not mildly insane.
Care to join us at dinner·?
Just !kat
Recent surveys teU us that bc!at
is getting bent. How about that?
But if you 're going to be a
"Beat" you nuty get beat by a beL­ter
Beatet·. Sideburns anyone? Ot·
do you go lot• goatees? Do you
say I need sleet>? You're so l'ight.
Small !ka t
The collegiate quote on a recent
eolumn was, "Boys will be boys"
-Monday mornings should be
Tuesday Ol' even Wednc•duys.
But then why not just week ends?
- Vacations come and go and so
must I. See you next month.
WHERE OLD
FRIENDS MEET
McConnell's
* ICE CREAM
and
LUNCHES
* bO N. Main Street
Pittsford, N. Y.
LUdlow b-31>3<4
The modem college girl can be
known by the scver·aJ roles she
plnys. Some of our students have
been lucky enough to lind outside
jobs which bcth•fit their college
work and mol'C t.hnn just finan­cially.
They are able to do work
which wins for them needed ex­pe:
rienw for their future work.
Sophomore J>nt Denniston can
be found teaching gym at St.
J erome's on 1'uct5day mornings.
Put's int.et·cst. in gym nnd aero·
bntics is t he resu It of a back­ground
bui1t. of dCvcraJ years' ex·
)>erience. Last y .. r Pat spent
week-ends at the CYO instructing
students in the proper use of gym
equipment when they come to
spend some time in recrea tion.
Pat taught modct·n dnnce to some
of he•· college mutes last year. Al­most
everyone will •·cn1cmber her
lovely interpretation of u Aut-unm
Leaves" in a rcc:ent student hour.
Her Tuesday morning clasS<>s
include a group of fourth graders
who are leo1·niug to run relay
races. Exercise, dodgebali and the
essentials of b:\skclbnll arc in ot··
der for· 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th
grade girls. Pat's classes average
about fifty students for P"riods
of 45 minutes. A morning of this
would exhau~t any student tea­cher.
On Saturdays Pal acts as
recreational directo•· of St. Pat­r
·ick's cottage at St. JoSCJ>h'~
Villa. Ele•·c she has 17 girls •·ang­ing
from age 6 to 15. Pat plays
baseball with the girls and takes
them on hikes. Th~y have learned
outdoor games. flat's jobs reveal
her interest in helping children
lcnl'D to work nnd piny together·.
We can be sm·e that M•·s. Destiny
NURSES' NOTES
by Mary Dolan
This month til St. Joseph's
hasn't been ovc.-l~f exciting. but
we have been tc•·a·ibly bu~y with
tests. You all huvc bt!cn e.xper icnc­i
ng the same ordeal, so you know
how busy it can lx'.
On October 28, we had our llal­loween
night. All the classes pre­sented
skits, "nd there were loads
or refreshments. Our etas..~ pre­sented
a s kit cll lled ''Hallowe'en
Ain't What rt Used To .Be." Anne
l\1 icha tek was our witehy nar­rator,
Stubby was our successful
"wild-poetry reader" in the Beat­nik
scene.
We arc now working in the
hospital eight hours a day for
t hree days n week. Naturally
we're seek ing t·cnH.•dics !or sore
feel and nchinl( backs. Anyone
have a good cu•·c-all?
Warren Grinnan's
Gourmet Shop
1525 Lake Avenue
Glen. 3-0570
Foncy ond Imported Foods
Trappist Mo nks Products
Come in end Brow:e
(as one of her students addressed
ber) Clljoys her work very much.
Other college girls w iII be
found at the llfcmol'inl Art Gal­lcr
·y on Sntu rdays. 'l'hese At·t
Majors, Dolor·es (Dec) Cicconi
and Virginia (Ginny) Burgbol­zcr,
work as art. a idea. Dee works
as an aide to lli.s Edna Smith,
who instructs clas..,s in clay
modeling for aix-and-seven-year­olds.
They have three classes 11
day with ten !.0 HCtcen pupils pel'
clnss. These beginners hav e
learned to model dogs and other
animals. Their lntes~ Jll'Oject was
clay Halloween masks. T be s e
were made to be hung on the wall
rather than worn. They colored
the masks Wtlh paint and glaze
ond th·cd them to complete their·
work o! art. As Dec • a i d, the
class has come n long way from
the beginning when "all they
wanted to do wa., mllke c.:ggs !"
Ginny also assisted Mrs. Juan­ita
Brown, who teaches at R.J.T.
Their students range from 12 Lo
17, boys and girls. ("The rom­ances
are interesting.") These
students model in tct'l'o cotta clay
and do ceramics. MosL of them
have had almost four years ex­~
rien« and do ~omc vcr)' good
work. The class is also equipped
with !lOttery wheels which are in
constant use. Ginny has helped
instr·uet the stud~nl• In "wedg­ing,"
u method of a·cmoving air
bubbles !rom clay. The students
art> also tsught to mix glazes
which they apply to their models.
Sodality Urges Adoration
For First Friday Devotion
Nazllreth College students have
the privi lege each l•'irst Friday
of the month to be in the pres­ence
of Our Lord !or specified
periods of that day, f'or n period
of ftftccn minutes, two Sodaiists,
in cnp and gown, lll'C requested
lo IJc present.. Addit.ionul caps and
~towns will be lll'Ov idcd in the rear
of the chat>cl. This is n golden
O}lpor·tunity in our atudent voca­tion.
A permanent list shall be
posted for signatures of all stu­dents
who wish to tr·uly observe
F ir·st Fr·idny nt Nnzarcth College.
Quite a few of us mude it to
Parents' Weekend. We thought i~
was very nice, and want. to eon­graLulate
everyone who worked
to make it the success it was.
Well, for this month we'll sign
otT. Sec you next month, same
plucc, same pnt>el'.
TV Tunings: The reason they
sing most of the commercials is
that they would sound even sillier
without mus ic.
- Marjorie J ohnson
OPEN EVENINGS
A. Dl PASQUALE
SHOE CO.
QUALITY SHOES
For the Entire Fomily
Sold Direct from Foctory
To You
313 N. UNION STREET
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
4
Collector's Corner
by
Sa lly
O'Toole
Here and there: A narcotics ad·
diet, but one of this tlra1s most rc­known
jau singers, BiUie Holi­day,
44, died last summer with
only 70 cents in her bank account.
llcr last nlbwn "Billie Holiday"
is supposed to be one o! her best.
Frank Sonatra is giving TV an­other
whirl. The King Sisters
Jlrove tha~ they still have what it
takes on their new album '"Warm
and Wonderful." The 0 e to be r
2flth cdi~ion of Downbc"t lists
these jazz o·coords as the ones
given an ·•excellent" rating in
their paot five issues: "Cone
With Lhc Wind," Dave Bl"lobeck;
"J\ind of Blue," ~Hies Duvis;
"The Jazz Soul of Porgy and
Be&.•.'' Bill Potto. Happy listen­ing!
Last edition I wrote that Ray
Anthony had disbanded h is
group, and indeed, he hns. But,
cheer up, things IU'e beginning to
look a litUe brighter. 'rhere is
still a ehancc that the big bands
mny come back. The big bund
business went into its slump in
the late 1940's. There were many
rensons fo1· 1ts decline, such as
high transporta tion costs, indif­ftr~
nce of musicians, and tele-­VISIOn.
Bu\. not only the bands
wco·e hit. Mo,~e attendance rell
otl', and t.he1·e was u marked de.­t•
·ease in interest in sports. At
lhc same t.intc, a new type of ndo­lcKccnt
cnmc into the scene. This
g••oup set., or tried to s.ct, ita own
slandards. The word "discipline'-'
had ~><!come ao·chaic. Their spend·
ing money nnd !1·ce time in­co
·cased. Their tastes, unguided
and undiseipUned, dropped ac­cordjngly.
They were the ones
who bought the o·ecoo·ds. And the
··~rds that they bought weren't
good!
Then one morning, Amc•·ica
awoke to find that Russia had
Pa·o!essoa·: ''This exam will be
<'Unduclcd on the honoa· system.
Please take seal:~ three s~ats
apart and in alternate row3."
To err ig hUinan, but when the
(_•rRS-er wears out tx-lore the pen­ril,
you'•·e overdoing it.
- Iowa Co·ecn Gander
"FLATIER THE FOOT"
with
PARMELEE'S SHOES
60 EAST AVENUE
ROSELLE GIFT SHOP
GIFTS - CARDS
1849 MONROE AVENUE
Rochester 18, N, Y.
seni up Sputnik. What effect
could Sputnik posoibly have on
popular music! Take a look
ao·ound. Suddenly we discovered
that many high school gn>duntes
were only semi-literate. Many
schools were found to oo in a sad
s tate. Science and onntb suddonly
took on 8 new importance. ScboJ.
astic achievement regained some
ot its lost ground. Magazines,
books, and newspapers called for
the American pooplc to Lake stoek
of themselves. The word "disci­pline"
is gradually coming back
into usc. Backbones are aga in be­eoming
more important than
wishbones. America is awaking to
the fact thut her stunda o·ds have
become debased, and she Is iry.
ing to raise them. Perhaps l am
being o v c r I y or>timistie, but
doesn't it natura lly follow that
musical iastc will also oo raised?
A I ready some progress lou been
made. Maynud Ferguson George
Shearing, and lilli'I'Y Ja;,es are
again going strong.
The National Ba.lroom Opcr­nto•
·s' Awsoeia tion has recently
begun a new publjc relations
campaign. Its aim ia to make the
n a t ion ballroom·conseious once
mot·e. Tho economic adva nt..ages
or record-hops influenced many
operators to stop hiring bands.
At the recent NBOA convention
Po·esidcnt Kenin of the AFM
hinted that the A FM might pos­sibly
share the expenses ror the
employment of musicians in bail­rooms.
Lct.'a ea·oss our fingers and
hope that this isn't just idle talk.
\Viie: "l.,.ool< at. these .-ugs I'm
wearing. They're so shnbby, if
nnyonc cAme to vitit, they'd thiuk
I wns the cook."
ll usbnnd: "Noi it they stayed
to•· dinnea·. ''
- "The Sale Woo·kco···
Compliments of
PISCITELLO
MACARONI
CO., INC.
GENESEE
TYPESETIING
SERVICE
Linotype Composition
145 ST. PAUL STREET
HAmaton 6-9710
---------·------~----
~·----------------
George BOUCHER
Florist, Inc.
422 MAIN ST, EAST
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
Compliments of
DUPLICATING
PRODUCTS CO.
460 C linton Ave . So.
Roche ste r 20, N. Y.
I
I I
i
I
I
THE GlEANER
On the walks or Nazareth Col­lege,
Rochester, N. y.
This is your roving reporter,
fearless Fosdick, lll!king the pro­verbial
question nbout LhiR the
s>umpkin und plum puddin~r' time
ot year, "How would you n1ost
like to spend your Thanksgiving
recer.;s ?"
Take a gander at this:
Rani Seiner, Senior:
"In BoRton with n friend." .. .
"!ale, Rani? Well! 1
Ann Louise Barnett, Senior:
(with n sly smile) "An exciting
weekend In the big city, Pots·
dam."
This is n big city????!
OoloJ'CS Cicconi, Junioa·:
"I'd love to spend all my days
in a library, go wild on re­search
nnd do about GOO term
pnpers, not see nny men, and
nbove all. no dates.."
How about Lhnt !or a revenml?
The t.-uc scholar?
Annette Costieh, Junior:
"Believe it. or not, sleeping!"
Confu.stious say- this is n wise
gi.-1.
l'eggy Cramer, .Fre~:hman:
"I'd love to go to Alaska and
have Thanksgiving with our
new citizens ol the U. S."
l'erhnp• to·ying to rccaptuo·e the
1\rst Thanksgiving by having
youo·s wllh the Alaskan Indians,
Peg!
Cm·ol !lender, Fo·c•hman:
'' I'd like to have n private dis­cu•$
iOn with the denn and oo
told thi\L I ht'ld nbaolutdy no
work lo make up!"
"U Dn~nms Cnmc T•·ue !"
ak HAmaton 6-8587
ANTHONY-KLEE
CORPORATION
Commerciol Printing
165 ST. PAUL ST.
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
JOHN R. BOURNE
COMPANY
Ill STATE STREET
Jtochester, N. Y.
STATIONERY
and
OFFICE EQUIPMENT I
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
The
Central
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITISFORD, N. Y.
I
I Phone i
1- lUdlow 6-3634 J A. B . _Dick Products
HAmilton 6-3740
~-------i
Notes from St. Jack's
by Jame• (Wally Ballou) Uond
"Togcthc.-ness;· the ott-dis·
paraged, ''cookie-c r u m b coo­rormity"
ethic preached today by
such ceo·ebral tomes as )lcCnll's
Magazine cnn oeeaBionaJly, when
its purpose is an acknowledged
good, work wonders. An example
o( this is the annual Red Co·oss
"blood-letting' at Fisher. Because
oC this "togetherntu." this co.
operation in soliciting donors,
both St. Jack's nnd Na1.areth
have annually led all area col·
leges in numoor of donors.
On roughly the same subject, it
was most gratifing to sec L he
large number or Nazareth stu­dents
who ca>nc to the lecture of
!>ather Gco·nld Vann, O.P., who
spoke lhe olbco• night on the
need in modern society or the
?'ore fully integrated man. Again,
It was mo$t gratifying (oo· oome­thing)
to see the large o·esponsc
of :-lazareth students at our
mixer of late. In tact. conserva­tive
estimates say that the gio·ls
far out-numb<!red the Fishern1en
present (which must mean iom~
thing). Anyw3y, we are plnnning
nnother one in th<! near fulure
(as soon, that is, as .\trs. Dots­roo-
d graduates her firsi class).
In t.he a·enlm or coming events
we have the sixth annual Debate
Tournan1ent on Saturday, :-:ov. 7_
(Actually this will no longeo· oo a
"coming ev~nt" whcm your paper
goes to Pl'ess.) Annually one or
the top collegiate debate tourna-
Frida y, November 20,
mcnts in lhc East, again
>·ear many well-known a.
(among which- Univ. or
burgh, U. o! R., R.I.T., LcM
will attend. In a tournt
which the host school canno
the University or Pittsburg!
first honoo·s last year. All a
vi ted. On Dee c m b c r 4·
Rolf Guild is presenting
Rainmaker.'' A recent bro1
hit.comcdy, your writer l
J)ersonal interest in soli
your support for it. (I am
ing the part of the Rain.)
Co·uttenden, Sophomore at
areth, has the female lead
fortunately we have no
8ltln1ps Ol' r1·ee SUCkers 01
loons so you will have to be
fled with oniy excellent en~
ment. Depending on whcth
not we get " bowl bid. a v
weekend will take place a
the first week o! Decemb<!r.
do we will have the weekenc
the game as an integral p1
it. So come on Ch<'ss Team!
As a final note l would I
oxtend to all of you a t>erson
vitotion to a Stein Club "baJ
crlebrate the reopening ol
clubhouse. A buft'et of h•
and absinthe wo ll be "
lhppy Guy Fawkes Day!
A very boastful cxplorn
horing his dinne1· guests w1f
eounts of his South A~
trip. "'And just as I looked i
my tent when I return~
boomed, " I saw a f~•·ocious
A weary voice repJied1
the mirror down!"
Super Sub!
It's been s.•id thnt the atomic submarine
"Nautilus" stays submerged so long that it
only surfaces to let the crew re-enlist.
Perhaps for this ~on, the Navy has taken
valuable sp~ce nboard the '"Nnutilus" for t he
only sofklrmk vending machine in the entire
submarine fleet.
Naturally (or you wouldn't hear about it
rrom 118) It's n Coca-Cola machine. And not
unexpectedly, re-enlistments are quite
respectable.
R~gged lot, those aubmarinera. Great
drank, Coke! SIGN OF GOOD
Dollied under <>ulhoray of The Coco-Colo Compony by
ROCHESTER COCA-COLA BOTILING CORP.
Rochester, N. Y.

Click tabs to swap between content that is broken into logical sections.

This digital image may be used for educational uses, as long as it is not altered in any way. Prior written permission is required for any other use of the images from the Nazareth College of Rochester Archives. http://www.naz.edu/dept/library/

Transcript

k''
n"
nd
ur
in
es.
Good Luck
Practice
Teachers
g. I'L - - - --- ---'
_.#mf CC5((E'"G~
LIBR~. r v
Remember!
Don't Miss
J. B.
...
uo
ay Vol. XXXV-No. 3
tr·
NAZARETH COLLEGE, ROCHESTER, N.Y. Friday, November 20, 1959
:~ NFCCS Hc»lds Weekend Congress;
he
he Presents Student Hour Program
•ol
The N. F. C. C. S. Congress
·e- was opened with a welcome to the
m delegates, in the Nazareth Col­Is.
lege Auditorium, on November 7,
st 1959, by the Chairman, Marcin
Reed. The theme of the Con­i~
l gress was "Justice In Buman Re­nt:
lations."
n- ~r. Allen Lowenstein, a grad­it
· UAle of the University of South
h> Carolina and Yale Law School, n
x, past president Qf the National
>Y Student Association in 1950, and
d, a former United Nations Olr
n~ serl'cr on Student Conditions in
k, the Nea1.· East and Africa who
he currently holds a position with
se the' Federal government, spoke on
ld 11(ntel'nationa1 Justice."
k- On Sunday afternoon, Novem­,;,
ber 8, 1959, Mr. James Conneen
d, add1-essed the Cong•·ess with the
er topic: "Human Relations." M'l·.
Conncen is the first national Vice­President
of tho Social Action
Affairs of N.F.C.C.S. and a stu­oknt
at St. Petru·'s College, Eliza·
>(•
th
C·
!s
ts
ly
4,
ld
~-
;h
,•.·
IS
l'.
l·
'"
beth, New Jersey.
At 2:45 J>.m. the Congress •·e-convcned
in the Nazareth College
Auditorium for the N.F.C.c.s.
Pt·aetical ApJ>iieations session.
James Conn~en spoke on having
a united front of Catholic Col­ltge
and University Students.
Mr. Fred Attea, head of the
National Commission on Indust..
rial Relations, N.F.C.C.S., de­livered
a speech on the commis­sion
system, its \UI.CS and abuses.
Annual Prog ram
On Thu1·sdny, November nine­teenth,
the N.F.C.C.S., or Nat­ional
Fedet·ation of Catholic Col­lege
students, presented its an­nual
program for our Student
Hour. Miss Joan Arns, a student
(rom Rosary Hill College in Buf­ralo,
spoke to the faculty and st u·
dent body. She is now president
of the Lake Erie Region of N.F.
C.C.S. which includes Nazareth,
Canisius, D'Youville, Gannon,
Mercyhuxst, Niagara, Rosary
Rill, and Villa Maria. She form·
el'ly served as class president in
her freshman year, the region's
secretary-treaS\1rcr in her sopho­more
year, and first vice-presi­dent
in he>· junior year.
Miss Arns has also attended
National Congresses in New
York City, San Ft·anciseo, and
St. Louis.
Speech Assembly
Elects New Officers
For Coming Year
The newly elected officers of
Speech Assembly a>'C Kathy La·
Delta, president, and Nancy Koch ,
seeretary . treasurer. Associate
faculty members are Sister Helen
Daniel, moderato!': Mrs. Naomi
Chamberlain, speech therapist;
and Miss Mm·y Ann Steckbeck, of
the Drama Department.
Speech Assembly will meet nt
fow· o'clock on the first and third
Wednesdays of every month in
Room 129. A coffee hour will fol­low
each meeting, during which n
question and answer period will
be conducted. All students arc in­vited
to attend these meetings.
This year, Speech Assembly
will supplement the speech cor­re·e is no fee for this pro-gmm.
Your meals and living
quarters a1·e provided for you.
What's the purpose of this pro­g
ram? First of all, it is to help
the patients. Raving someone
come and tolk to them is one of
t he best ways to get mental pat­ients
out of the withdrawal which
is one of the symptoms of men­tal
illness. Secondly, the pt·ogram
helps us get over our false ideas
and subconscious fears of mental
illness.
Some of the girls from Naz­areth
have a lready participated
a nd have found it very rewarding.
Many others have signed up. If
you are interested contact Mary
Joan Costigan, Senior.
(!)h, .Prwi that ieH&
me /4e .Puu£ me a
h.ea/d~wdh
~l"eu
ton, lighting technician !or Catho·
lic Theater and Music Theater;
Dr. Daniel Subtelny; Or. Joanne
Subtelny; and Mr. Robert Smett.
Noted Catholic Lecturer
Addresses Student Body
Sixth i n the series of distin­guished
lecturers invited to Na,a­reth
Coliege this year is the noted
English Catholic lecturer, trans­later,
a nd columnist, Miss Cecily
Hastings. Miss Hastings a d­dressed
the student body on Nov­ember
19.
Developing her topic "Religion
under the Open Sky," Miss Hast­ings
n~counted her own expe1'­iences
as a :speake1· lor the Eng­lish
Catholic Evidence Guild.
Guild members explain Catholic
dogma and practice to street-cor­ner
crowds. Miss Hastings drew
upon her own decade of service to
describe the religious needs and
difficulties of the average man.
She also pointed out how startling
but bow profitable are the unex­pected
realizations of gaps in the
s peaker's own understanding of
the faith.
Miss Hastings is the second
British lecturer to address the
faculty a nd students this year .
Douglas Hyde, who visited the
College in October, is also a
na tive of England.
Mission Day profits total
approximately $3,500. Con­gratulations
to M1·s. Raillon!
Concert, Dance Planned
For St. Bonaventure Day
On December 5, 1959, Naz­at
·eth girls will gt·eet the men of
St. Bonaventure for the scheduJed
St. Bonaventure's Day. This Day
will be held at Naza>·eth ·College
and is planned along lines similar
to the Octobet· Festival.
A senior, Mary Anne Linck,
presides o v c r t h e committee
planning the Day. Members of
the committee include: Emanu­ella
Canzoneri, Entertainment
Chairman; Linda Casey, Hostess
Chairman; Joan Stankus, Pub-
1 icity Chairman; Kathy La­Delpha,
Mistress of Ceremonies
for Entertainment; P a t r i c i a
Lonergan, Decorations Ghaitmnn;
and Connie Dodge, Chairman of
Buffet Suppel'.
European-Bound Students
Given Pertinent Information
The opportunity to visit Eu­rope
in 1960 continues to attract
the Nazareth student body. Since
the first. announcement was mnde
by Dr. Otto in Septembc>·, many
students have become curio us as
to whe1·e they will go and what
they can expect to see. To aoswe>·
some of their questions two stu ..
dent hour programs arc being
devoted to the iss ue.
On November 12, Mr. Grennel
of Trans-Worid-Airlincs present­ed
films on Spain, France, and
Jtaly. Following the films he dis­cussed
other aspects of the trip.
On December 3 Mr. Grennel
will again present a film, entitled
uAir Advcntm·e to Eut·ope," a1te.r
which a discussion pet·iod will be
held. It is hoped thai the ques­t
ions of prospective tom·ists will
prove to be a means of deepening
their appreciation of what lie.•
ahead for them. •ro those lucky
students who will become inter­national
travelers this spring­Bon
voyage!
Sociology Majors
Attend Conference
During the week of Novembet·
l 5. senior sociology majors at­tended
the New York State Wel­fare
Co•tfe>·ence in Syracuse. At
a student meeting on Tucsday,
November 17, they observed a
panel discussion in which Miss
Virginia Jones, an alumna of
Nazareth College, participated.
Sister Paulette, chairman of the
Sociology Department, presided at
a meeting at which Dr. White
from Washington D.C., rept·cscnt­ing
the Council on Social Work
Education, was the pl'incipal
speaker.
Plans for this Day include: a
buffet supper at 5 :30 P.M.; a
joint concert of the Nazareth and
St. Bonaventure Glee Clubs at
7:00 P.:M., and climaxed by infor­mal
dance from 9-12.
St. Bonaventure Day welcomes
all co1ners. Come one! come aU!
University Founder
Headlines Assembly
Dr. 'l'homas P. Melady, an au­thority
on current development in
Africa, will speak a t Student
Rout• on Dec·>mber 10. llis topic
will bo "Great Living Men of
Af1·ica."
The Jnstituie of African
Studies at Duquesne University
was founded hy D•·· Melady. At
present, he is organizing "The
African Fai>·" which is scheduled
to visit A mc.ric:a cities during
1960. The fait· will present prog­rams
on culture, trade oppOr·
tunitics, and study in Afriea. D1·.
Melady has been Foreign Trade
Advisor for Africa i11 the Depart­ment
of State, and he has taught
in Ethiopia at the Ethiopian Uni­versity
College. Tn the spring of
1960, his book Pro/ile8 of African
Learospective tea­chers
and social workers, but
plans to complete senior inter­views
before the Ch>·istmas holi­days.
The placement service offered
by Nazareth College gives its stu­dent-
s and alumnae the oppor­tunity
to secure positions suited
tu their abilities and tastes with­out
the inconvenience and ex­pense
involved in negotiating with
outside placement agencies. 'l'he
College offers this servic~ free
of charge, while professional
agencies charge as much as live
percent of the initial salat·y.
For several years the record
for placement of Nazareth sen­iors
has been one hundred per·
cent. The placement director a lso
secures part;..time and summer
employment for students who ap­ply
to her.
During the school year seniol'
sociology majors spend Tuesday
morning visiting institutions and
agencies in and around Rochester.
Thank Thee for Education
\\'hen Thanksgiving dawns probably the thing most of us are thank·
ful for is the fact that it is a holiday.
However, what else do we feel thankful fo1· on Thnnksgiving? We
arc thankful for parents, friends, life, liberty and ou•· material pos­sessions.
But how many of us say "thank you" for the thi ngs we have
that we don't like?
When an extra heavy assignment or term paper ia assigned O\'Cr
the holiday, bow many o! us are thankful !or it? :-:ot very many. Most
of us apend most of our time griping over the mju•tice of it all and
then the lust minute stay up all night to do it-a martyr to the cause
of education. We nil do it; it is htlllll\11 nature to put off distasteful
things until the last minute.
However, the phase of it that needs examining is our attitude. Every
o.s:ugnment has a purpose even though we may not rcnlir.c it at the time.
Everything we do now helps shape our character. If we wilt under an
cxt1·n us~ignment now, what. will we don few yctu·s lt·om now· when n
gt·enl.le
fnt· nnd wide. But with the increase in student. numbers, n situation
which ha~ been gJ'uduully developin~ 18 this year uggruvnted into u
majo•· problem. In 1950, when we hud 415 students, even in 1954, when
there wea·e 137 on campus, the five-minute interval b.,•twcen classess was
adequate, :-\ow w1th over GOO students su•·ging a1·ound at the end or
every 60 minute period, many of them desperately tryinlt' to · make it'
C•·om u hb1·ary classroom to one on the second or thi1·d Ooor or th,·
admiui~ttrntion building, it seem~ thnt. five minutes it! not long enougH.
Pn1·t. of Lite diflieu lt.y, however, seems to grow oul o·r the thoughtless­nc:
ts of students who urc not themselves en route to another class nt.
th~ momC'nL Such students are ofwn seen blocking 1>agsa.geways o1·
lo•tering on the stair• or landings to chat with someone going in the
op,,osite direction, while a crowd o! other students is forced to scram·
blc discourteously around them. There appear to be two 1>ossible solu­tions
to the tn·oblem o! "unavoidable delay" in change of classes:
cith~e· n t.cu-minuLe int.CI'vul between classes, which would necessilnlc
running tbe customa•·y 8 "hour" doy until 5 o'clock instead of 4, or
(equally undesirable) intitating a program of Saturday classes. Bt'­fore
such drastic measures become reality. why not experiment. with
what a litUe "enlightened self-interest" could accomplish? Let's think
beCo1·e we walk. Let's nsk ourselves, ''Which is the most di1·ect way to
!llY nex_t. class?" H possible, usc stnia·wnyli in the front pnl't or the
administration bui lding to relieve the congestion on the reaJ· sta i1·!J hy
the cloister walk. Uemember, the Saturdsy you S8\'c may borters .. Rosemary Christiano, Cathcl'ine Gormley, Lot·elln Scinta,
Virginin Burgholzer, Pntricia Trlonfct·a, Sally O'Toole, Dorine
llonan, Kay B.•rrelt, Grace Corcoran, Ann Gilbert, Eileen MeGee,
Ruth Uowan, Joanne Wolfe, Barbara Kraus, Patricia Powderly,
Anne Glngowski, Kathy Sheehan, Chl'istine WickN'l, Jean Brodeur,
Eleanor Kawkn, Patricia Brogan, Diane Sciscioli, Sheila Kelly,
Mn1·y Kay MacNamara, Marilyn Cnhie•·, Mary Ann Lanahan,
Lnu1·e! :llille•·, J>utriciu Denniston, Judy Todd, Jody Ryan. Eliza­beth
Tyne, Kathy O'Brien, Ma•·y Dolan, Joanne Sca•·lotta.
Business Manager ........................... . ...... Patricia Walsh
Proo!readcrs. -. - ............... Susan McGinnis, Mory Kay Killackey
l llustJ·nto•· . .... .. . •....... ...... ... . ... . .......... Dolores Cicconi
Typists ....... ·~ ...................... Murcia Davis, Francine Hart
Advisor .................................... Sister Thomas Marion
THE GLEANER
CHAPLAIN'S CORNER
The )J n s •
begins wi~h
those remark·
able words of
deliberate
choice w h i c b
arc at once on
expression or
human dignit)•
and a stat.C!·
ment of the
Futhcr Shannon freedom oC the
child ron of
God: •·r will go unto the altar of
God.'' We do not say: "I have to
go to the altar of God" or "I
ought to go," but "I want to go."
We could choo8e otherwise. We
could say: ·• I will go unto I h e
bt·cakfast table to start my day,"
or Hf will go unto a classroom to
stnrt my day." Every time we go
to M a s s, w ~ a r e deliberately
choosing to stu•·t our day at Cod's
Llltar.
l tiilY this is an expt·cs.sion of
human dignity; it's good psychol­ogy
too. The firot step toward be­coming
a saint. is to want to be­come
a saint.: thu ti.-st step townrd
becoming u I(OOd student iK to
want to bccoen • u good student..
So lbe fit·st step toward making
the )tass important in my life is
to want to make it impo1·tant in
my life.
0! com·~e. we cannot really MY
those wo1·ds : " I will go unto the
altar of God'' in church or chnt>el
in the morning, unless we hnve
already said these words of deli·
berate choic.o at least twice before.
FiJ"St, we must suy them the night
before. When we set. our nln1'm,
we huve t.c> make a delibenlte de·
cision : "I will go unto the alta a·
of God tomorrow morning:' Then,
when the ulann goes off (that
c•·ucial monwnt each day when
chornct.e•·s nrc mnde or broken)
we must sny once again: '"I wi ll
go unto lhe aita1· of G o d t hi a
IUOl'ning."
But it i.s noL enough to answet·
the quesdon: "Will I go to the
nlta t· of God?'' Supposing the an­bWel
· is: " I will," l must still nn·
wwer anoth ca· question: "' llow
shall l go lo the altar of God?'
The answer d~numds an aware·
ness tha~ the )lass is primaril)•
not a prayer but an ac:tion, nnd
the action o! the Mass is the ac­tion
of gift-giving. l must go to
the altar of God, not empty-han­ded,
but with gir~. The only ~tift
I can give that is really impor­tant
is myse, r. How much of my­self
will I give? As much as I can
today. Plense God, the next time
il will be niOI'c. I wi ll give my duy
- with its clusscs and ossign­ntents,
its fJ'irndships and con­Oicts.
its joys and sorrows. I will
1·11~ them on the paten. I will pou1·
them into lhe chnlice. 1 will ask
Ch•·ist to trnnsfo•·m them into a
gi ft worthy of Cod. The M a so
will become not only Chl'ist'•
gift or the Church ·s, but m i n e
also.
A Catholic is ns lt'ood o 1 a •
mediocre as his Mass. Jlow much
docs the Mass mtun to me? llow
m u c h \Y i 11 it mean to me? A
g1eat deal depends on how and
how often I say those words or de­liberate
choke: "I will go unto
lhe altar or God."
Quip heard in Washington, D.C.:
'"II you're n()t confused, you'rletely subordinated to thi• authority. Cn~
tian ity, on t he other hand, recognizes tho s upreme dignity o! ~
individunl and the God-given rights which bpose them. Thirdly, Communists arc indoctrin&
from early youth with the idea of the sup1·emacy of their ccon
system. They are led to believe that the future is inevitably
because the forces of history so determine it.
Though Communists and Christians aim at the same objecti
wodd conqucst-Christian3 cannot countenance such brutal and u
telligcnt means to that end, however effective they may be at
moment. And in (act, if one looks closely at the contemporary
one discovers that many Christians are doing a good job of living
own dediution. Any number of Christians have taken positiom
chosen CIII'CN'S which are di•taste!ul to themselves personally
o! the OPIIOI'tunity such t>osilions afford for inHuencing othcn.
Such conduct is la•·gely inspired by a movement. begun in 1045,
Christopher movement. Its purpose is to cu•·ry the truth, justice,
decency of Christian principles out of homes and churches into
contemporary scene in n concerted effort to change the world for
better. Today thousands n•·e doing just that.
Much mot·e "doing" is 11 desperate need. But let us not undc•·esti
the dedienled men and women who a1·e J•ight now "'doing," who
ualously encouraging and inHuencing others, who arc pc•·meuting
phases of n1odcrn life with the truth and love of Christ, who are
ing to sanctify the whole world, the whole or life, and the whole
by applyinlt' the message of the Gospel.
"It is bette•· to light one cundle than to ctu·sc the da•·kness."
we cannot. alford to he snt.isfied too easily in times "when atToirs
souJ.size." \Vc must a1el't.. out·se.Jves to means and ends.
The main hall hummed with
the voices of hundreds of milling
students from Ireland and abroad,
returned from their summer holi­day
to begin or resume their
studies uL U.C.D. Gradually, hav­ing
learned !J-om the porte•· the
1oom number~ for vurious lee­lUI'~
(thel'!• being no posted
•~hedule, as at home), succ~ssive
g•·oups or students departed, leav­ing
thnSS·
a hie.
To look nt the three sto•·y g1·nn·
ite building on Ea•·lsfoJ·t Tel'l'ace.
I did not guess that it was the
gtneral headquarters for about
G,COO students, although it i~ n
large edifice. Not all leetm·es for
the various Cncu lties - liberal
arts. science. law, medicinurses, often divided into two
''Passe~'" nnd two '; llonours.,
courses. This distinction seems to
be essential ly one of dc1>th of
study and nmount and quolily of
work expected. For s~nd and
third years, students take one or
(more often) two course•;
they eomc to know lho•·oughly
one fails the second year
is possible to proceed to t h
yen r, as the degree exam (
I think comparable to our
prehensive) at the end ol
year cove•·• both years' work.
is the all-important B.A. exu
considerable amount or oo·
reading is expected in conn
\\.'ith each com·sc; in historr
have several separnle book
!ot• the different lcctu•·e scrl
the course. In fact, my book
begin to resemble a library'•
catalogue! Outside work 11
confined to reading; I
twelve letm papcJ•s due ia
cour:JC of this year.
Despite a busy ucademi<
the students I have met hart
for run as well. There is a
i ng of some club every nig •
well ns un unbelievable num
mixers sponso1·ed by the diff
facu lties. These f riendly mea
women may be seen chatt1
the lounge, dancing at
dances, called ceilidhes (ka
or s trolling beneath the
holly, and evergreen in the
ful lvcugh Gardens which
the main building with St
House, the student center
old adage about all work
play is g i v e n a pratical
cation, 1\nd the vitality is i
ious. The more I see or lrl
the more I love it!
-Deirde llcl\i.
•59 friday, November 20, 1959
Church in the Suburbs
by Cntherinc Gormley
u Tne Church and the Suburbs
It • by Andrew M. Gr~eley
This book i s a re1ume o I a
lfltSI's impressions of the s ub­rblln
migration. It points out
oly U~me of the mnin suburban
roblems and their implications
!or the Catholic Chui"Ch.
Father Gt'Cfley's purpose is to
"'" the diseussion. lie docs not
r4 hotels
io the U.S.A., Hawaii and
C.nada. Jus~ prcsen~ your
Shmt.on J.D. card when you
rte~st
and beans, it often gets cover-ed
over by butter and is laid to T? You're so l'ight.
Small !ka t
The collegiate quote on a recent
eolumn was, "Boys will be boys"
-Monday mornings should be
Tuesday Ol' even Wednc•duys.
But then why not just week ends?
- Vacations come and go and so
must I. See you next month.
WHERE OLD
FRIENDS MEET
McConnell's
* ICE CREAM
and
LUNCHES
* bO N. Main Street
Pittsford, N. Y.
LUdlow b-31>3<4
The modem college girl can be
known by the scver·aJ roles she
plnys. Some of our students have
been lucky enough to lind outside
jobs which bcth•fit their college
work and mol'C t.hnn just finan­cially.
They are able to do work
which wins for them needed ex­pe:
rienw for their future work.
Sophomore J>nt Denniston can
be found teaching gym at St.
J erome's on 1'uct5day mornings.
Put's int.et·cst. in gym nnd aero·
bntics is t he resu It of a back­ground
bui1t. of dCvcraJ years' ex·
)>erience. Last y .. r Pat spent
week-ends at the CYO instructing
students in the proper use of gym
equipment when they come to
spend some time in recrea tion.
Pat taught modct·n dnnce to some
of he•· college mutes last year. Al­most
everyone will •·cn1cmber her
lovely interpretation of u Aut-unm
Leaves" in a rcc:ent student hour.
Her Tuesday morning clasS<>s
include a group of fourth graders
who are leo1·niug to run relay
races. Exercise, dodgebali and the
essentials of b:\skclbnll arc in ot··
der for· 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th
grade girls. Pat's classes average
about fifty students for P"riods
of 45 minutes. A morning of this
would exhau~t any student tea­cher.
On Saturdays Pal acts as
recreational directo•· of St. Pat­r
·ick's cottage at St. JoSCJ>h'~
Villa. Ele•·c she has 17 girls •·ang­ing
from age 6 to 15. Pat plays
baseball with the girls and takes
them on hikes. Th~y have learned
outdoor games. flat's jobs reveal
her interest in helping children
lcnl'D to work nnd piny together·.
We can be sm·e that M•·s. Destiny
NURSES' NOTES
by Mary Dolan
This month til St. Joseph's
hasn't been ovc.-l~f exciting. but
we have been tc•·a·ibly bu~y with
tests. You all huvc bt!cn e.xper icnc­i
ng the same ordeal, so you know
how busy it can lx'.
On October 28, we had our llal­loween
night. All the classes pre­sented
skits, "nd there were loads
or refreshments. Our etas..~ pre­sented
a s kit cll lled ''Hallowe'en
Ain't What rt Used To .Be." Anne
l\1 icha tek was our witehy nar­rator,
Stubby was our successful
"wild-poetry reader" in the Beat­nik
scene.
We arc now working in the
hospital eight hours a day for
t hree days n week. Naturally
we're seek ing t·cnH.•dics !or sore
feel and nchinl( backs. Anyone
have a good cu•·c-all?
Warren Grinnan's
Gourmet Shop
1525 Lake Avenue
Glen. 3-0570
Foncy ond Imported Foods
Trappist Mo nks Products
Come in end Brow:e
(as one of her students addressed
ber) Clljoys her work very much.
Other college girls w iII be
found at the llfcmol'inl Art Gal­lcr
·y on Sntu rdays. 'l'hese At·t
Majors, Dolor·es (Dec) Cicconi
and Virginia (Ginny) Burgbol­zcr,
work as art. a idea. Dee works
as an aide to lli.s Edna Smith,
who instructs clas..,s in clay
modeling for aix-and-seven-year­olds.
They have three classes 11
day with ten !.0 HCtcen pupils pel'
clnss. These beginners hav e
learned to model dogs and other
animals. Their lntes~ Jll'Oject was
clay Halloween masks. T be s e
were made to be hung on the wall
rather than worn. They colored
the masks Wtlh paint and glaze
ond th·cd them to complete their·
work o! art. As Dec • a i d, the
class has come n long way from
the beginning when "all they
wanted to do wa., mllke c.:ggs !"
Ginny also assisted Mrs. Juan­ita
Brown, who teaches at R.J.T.
Their students range from 12 Lo
17, boys and girls. ("The rom­ances
are interesting.") These
students model in tct'l'o cotta clay
and do ceramics. MosL of them
have had almost four years ex­~
rien« and do ~omc vcr)' good
work. The class is also equipped
with !lOttery wheels which are in
constant use. Ginny has helped
instr·uet the stud~nl• In "wedg­ing,"
u method of a·cmoving air
bubbles !rom clay. The students
art> also tsught to mix glazes
which they apply to their models.
Sodality Urges Adoration
For First Friday Devotion
Nazllreth College students have
the privi lege each l•'irst Friday
of the month to be in the pres­ence
of Our Lord !or specified
periods of that day, f'or n period
of ftftccn minutes, two Sodaiists,
in cnp and gown, lll'C requested
lo IJc present.. Addit.ionul caps and
~towns will be lll'Ov idcd in the rear
of the chat>cl. This is n golden
O}lpor·tunity in our atudent voca­tion.
A permanent list shall be
posted for signatures of all stu­dents
who wish to tr·uly observe
F ir·st Fr·idny nt Nnzarcth College.
Quite a few of us mude it to
Parents' Weekend. We thought i~
was very nice, and want. to eon­graLulate
everyone who worked
to make it the success it was.
Well, for this month we'll sign
otT. Sec you next month, same
plucc, same pnt>el'.
TV Tunings: The reason they
sing most of the commercials is
that they would sound even sillier
without mus ic.
- Marjorie J ohnson
OPEN EVENINGS
A. Dl PASQUALE
SHOE CO.
QUALITY SHOES
For the Entire Fomily
Sold Direct from Foctory
To You
313 N. UNION STREET
ROCHESTER, N. Y.
4
Collector's Corner
by
Sa lly
O'Toole
Here and there: A narcotics ad·
diet, but one of this tlra1s most rc­known
jau singers, BiUie Holi­day,
44, died last summer with
only 70 cents in her bank account.
llcr last nlbwn "Billie Holiday"
is supposed to be one o! her best.
Frank Sonatra is giving TV an­other
whirl. The King Sisters
Jlrove tha~ they still have what it
takes on their new album '"Warm
and Wonderful." The 0 e to be r
2flth cdi~ion of Downbc"t lists
these jazz o·coords as the ones
given an ·•excellent" rating in
their paot five issues: "Cone
With Lhc Wind," Dave Bl"lobeck;
"J\ind of Blue," ~Hies Duvis;
"The Jazz Soul of Porgy and
Be&.•.'' Bill Potto. Happy listen­ing!
Last edition I wrote that Ray
Anthony had disbanded h is
group, and indeed, he hns. But,
cheer up, things IU'e beginning to
look a litUe brighter. 'rhere is
still a ehancc that the big bands
mny come back. The big bund
business went into its slump in
the late 1940's. There were many
rensons fo1· 1ts decline, such as
high transporta tion costs, indif­ftr~
nce of musicians, and tele-­VISIOn.
Bu\. not only the bands
wco·e hit. Mo,~e attendance rell
otl', and t.he1·e was u marked de.­t•
·ease in interest in sports. At
lhc same t.intc, a new type of ndo­lcKccnt
cnmc into the scene. This
g••oup set., or tried to s.ct, ita own
slandards. The word "discipline'-'
had ~>duntes
were only semi-literate. Many
schools were found to oo in a sad
s tate. Science and onntb suddonly
took on 8 new importance. ScboJ.
astic achievement regained some
ot its lost ground. Magazines,
books, and newspapers called for
the American pooplc to Lake stoek
of themselves. The word "disci­pline"
is gradually coming back
into usc. Backbones are aga in be­eoming
more important than
wishbones. America is awaking to
the fact thut her stunda o·ds have
become debased, and she Is iry.
ing to raise them. Perhaps l am
being o v c r I y or>timistie, but
doesn't it natura lly follow that
musical iastc will also oo raised?
A I ready some progress lou been
made. Maynud Ferguson George
Shearing, and lilli'I'Y Ja;,es are
again going strong.
The National Ba.lroom Opcr­nto•
·s' Awsoeia tion has recently
begun a new publjc relations
campaign. Its aim ia to make the
n a t ion ballroom·conseious once
mot·e. Tho economic adva nt..ages
or record-hops influenced many
operators to stop hiring bands.
At the recent NBOA convention
Po·esidcnt Kenin of the AFM
hinted that the A FM might pos­sibly
share the expenses ror the
employment of musicians in bail­rooms.
Lct.'a ea·oss our fingers and
hope that this isn't just idle talk.
\Viie: "l.,.ool< at. these .-ugs I'm
wearing. They're so shnbby, if
nnyonc cAme to vitit, they'd thiuk
I wns the cook."
ll usbnnd: "Noi it they stayed
to•· dinnea·. ''
- "The Sale Woo·kco···
Compliments of
PISCITELLO
MACARONI
CO., INC.
GENESEE
TYPESETIING
SERVICE
Linotype Composition
145 ST. PAUL STREET
HAmaton 6-9710
---------·------~----
~·----------------
George BOUCHER
Florist, Inc.
422 MAIN ST, EAST
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
Compliments of
DUPLICATING
PRODUCTS CO.
460 C linton Ave . So.
Roche ste r 20, N. Y.
I
I I
i
I
I
THE GlEANER
On the walks or Nazareth Col­lege,
Rochester, N. y.
This is your roving reporter,
fearless Fosdick, lll!king the pro­verbial
question nbout LhiR the
s>umpkin und plum puddin~r' time
ot year, "How would you n1ost
like to spend your Thanksgiving
recer.;s ?"
Take a gander at this:
Rani Seiner, Senior:
"In BoRton with n friend." .. .
"!ale, Rani? Well! 1
Ann Louise Barnett, Senior:
(with n sly smile) "An exciting
weekend In the big city, Pots·
dam."
This is n big city????!
OoloJ'CS Cicconi, Junioa·:
"I'd love to spend all my days
in a library, go wild on re­search
nnd do about GOO term
pnpers, not see nny men, and
nbove all. no dates.."
How about Lhnt !or a revenml?
The t.-uc scholar?
Annette Costieh, Junior:
"Believe it. or not, sleeping!"
Confu.stious say- this is n wise
gi.-1.
l'eggy Cramer, .Fre~:hman:
"I'd love to go to Alaska and
have Thanksgiving with our
new citizens ol the U. S."
l'erhnp• to·ying to rccaptuo·e the
1\rst Thanksgiving by having
youo·s wllh the Alaskan Indians,
Peg!
Cm·ol !lender, Fo·c•hman:
'' I'd like to have n private dis­cu•$
iOn with the denn and oo
told thi\L I ht'ld nbaolutdy no
work lo make up!"
"U Dn~nms Cnmc T•·ue !"
ak HAmaton 6-8587
ANTHONY-KLEE
CORPORATION
Commerciol Printing
165 ST. PAUL ST.
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
JOHN R. BOURNE
COMPANY
Ill STATE STREET
Jtochester, N. Y.
STATIONERY
and
OFFICE EQUIPMENT I
PRESCRIPTION
SPECIALISTS
The
Central
Pharmacy
9 SOUTH MAIN ST.
PITISFORD, N. Y.
I
I Phone i
1- lUdlow 6-3634 J A. B . _Dick Products
HAmilton 6-3740
~-------i
Notes from St. Jack's
by Jame• (Wally Ballou) Uond
"Togcthc.-ness;· the ott-dis·
paraged, ''cookie-c r u m b coo­rormity"
ethic preached today by
such ceo·ebral tomes as )lcCnll's
Magazine cnn oeeaBionaJly, when
its purpose is an acknowledged
good, work wonders. An example
o( this is the annual Red Co·oss
"blood-letting' at Fisher. Because
oC this "togetherntu." this co.
operation in soliciting donors,
both St. Jack's nnd Na1.areth
have annually led all area col·
leges in numoor of donors.
On roughly the same subject, it
was most gratifing to sec L he
large number or Nazareth stu­dents
who ca>nc to the lecture of
!>ather Gco·nld Vann, O.P., who
spoke lhe olbco• night on the
need in modern society or the
?'ore fully integrated man. Again,
It was mo$t gratifying (oo· oome­thing)
to see the large o·esponsc
of :-lazareth students at our
mixer of late. In tact. conserva­tive
estimates say that the gio·ls
far out-numb·ear many well-known a.
(among which- Univ. or
burgh, U. o! R., R.I.T., LcM
will attend. In a tournt
which the host school canno
the University or Pittsburg!
first honoo·s last year. All a
vi ted. On Dee c m b c r 4·
Rolf Guild is presenting
Rainmaker.'' A recent bro1
hit.comcdy, your writer l
J)ersonal interest in soli
your support for it. (I am
ing the part of the Rain.)
Co·uttenden, Sophomore at
areth, has the female lead
fortunately we have no
8ltln1ps Ol' r1·ee SUCkers 01
loons so you will have to be
fled with oniy excellent en~
ment. Depending on whcth
not we get " bowl bid. a v
weekend will take place a
the first week o! Decemberson
vitotion to a Stein Club "baJ
crlebrate the reopening ol
clubhouse. A buft'et of h•
and absinthe wo ll be "
lhppy Guy Fawkes Day!
A very boastful cxplorn
horing his dinne1· guests w1f
eounts of his South A~
trip. "'And just as I looked i
my tent when I return~
boomed, " I saw a f~•·ocious
A weary voice repJied1
the mirror down!"
Super Sub!
It's been s.•id thnt the atomic submarine
"Nautilus" stays submerged so long that it
only surfaces to let the crew re-enlist.
Perhaps for this ~on, the Navy has taken
valuable sp~ce nboard the '"Nnutilus" for t he
only sofklrmk vending machine in the entire
submarine fleet.
Naturally (or you wouldn't hear about it
rrom 118) It's n Coca-Cola machine. And not
unexpectedly, re-enlistments are quite
respectable.
R~gged lot, those aubmarinera. Great
drank, Coke! SIGN OF GOOD
Dollied under <>ulhoray of The Coco-Colo Compony by
ROCHESTER COCA-COLA BOTILING CORP.
Rochester, N. Y.